KoNickon
Nick Merritt
OK, this may be one of the more extreme geek contests on this forum (and for all I know it's been done before). But the idea of coming up with mythical organizations with acronyms that are also from the crazy E. Leitz product coding system struck me as a potential source of amusement. Here are two I've come up with:
ABLON -- Association for Bottom Loader Orthodoxy and Nitpicking
VIDOM -- Viewfinder Individualists Destined for Optical Miscalculations
Anyone have others they've come up with? I know; I need to get out more.
ABLON -- Association for Bottom Loader Orthodoxy and Nitpicking
VIDOM -- Viewfinder Individualists Destined for Optical Miscalculations
Anyone have others they've come up with? I know; I need to get out more.
squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
If you are interested in a bit of related geekery, you should visit my Random Leica Accessory Generator.
Meanwhile, NOOKY = Nude Orgiastic Orangutan Kevlar Yurt.
Meanwhile, NOOKY = Nude Orgiastic Orangutan Kevlar Yurt.
payasam
a.k.a. Mukul Dube
FOOKH don't need none.
Luddite Frank
Well-known
Perhaps this is already known, but Leitz's "crazy coding system" was not unique to E. Leitz, and not so crazy once upon a time.
These codes were "telegraphic codes", used to reference specific items in the pre Internet / Facsimile age...
I have seen similar "crazy" product codes in any variety of factory parts catalogs from the 1930's & '40s for Chrysler, Chevrolet , and other auto-makers.
Apparently, in the days of Morse code, word codes worked better than alpha-numerics... ?
These codes were "telegraphic codes", used to reference specific items in the pre Internet / Facsimile age...
I have seen similar "crazy" product codes in any variety of factory parts catalogs from the 1930's & '40s for Chrysler, Chevrolet , and other auto-makers.
Apparently, in the days of Morse code, word codes worked better than alpha-numerics... ?
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Dralowid
Michael
NOOKY HESUM is a menage a trois.
Using a Visoflex would be a humourless experience without the codes
Michael
Using a Visoflex would be a humourless experience without the codes
Michael
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